Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
WOMAN'S PAGE. Expert Ways of Packing Luggage BY LYDIA LE BARON WALKER. There are two expert ways of pack- ing a suit case, One is to fold every- 53 ua:s flat and lay the things in piles, an A neatly together. The other is to roll the garments and fit the cylin- »~ drical bundles into the case. In each instance, whether the garments are THE FROCKS SHOULD BE SHAKEN GENTLY AND THEN ROLLED. folded or rolled, tissue paper should be ut in such places as will prevent ks getting creased. The tissue paper is needed to stuff Mto sleeves at the arm-sizes, when gar- ments are folded, and to lay between folds of the goods. When dresses are BEDTIME STORIES Egret Goes His Way. For freedom there can never be A substitute, we all agree. —Old Mother Nature. Egret was feeling better every day. That is to say, his wing was feeling better where it had been wounded. Each day he tried lifting it a little more. Farmer Brown's Boy saw this and was glad. Yet he was sorry, too. He had grown fond of the beautifu wWhite bird and he didn’t like to think UP, UP WENT EGRET AND OVER & TOWARD THE BIG RIVER, of the time when he would see it no more. But, of course, Egret must go, Farmer Brown's Boy hadn't the slight- est _idea of keeping Egret a prisoner. SHe isn't a prisoner,” explained Farmer Brown’s Boy to Mother Brown. “People in hospitals are not prisoners. They are just patients. ‘That is what Egret is, a patient. And when he is well he will be set free.” “Don’t you think it would be nice to keep him as a pet?” asked Mother Brown. “He is such a handsome fellow, MENU FOR A DAY. - BREAKFAST. Sliced Peaches. Bran with Cream. Plain Omelet. Blueberry Muffins. CofTee. LUNCHEON. Crab Meat au Gratin, Crisp Rolls. Pruit Gelatin. Almond Cake. Iced Coffee. DINNER. Clear Soup. Shepherd’s Ple. Boiled Carrots. Green Beans. Butterfly Salad. Peach Shortcake. Whipped Cream. Coffee. BLUEBERRY MUFFINS, ‘Two cups flour, two table- spoons baking powder, one-quar- ter teaspoon salt, one-quarter cup sugar, two tablespoons melted butter, one egg, one cup milk, one cup blueberries. Sift all dry ingredients twice; add melted butter with beaten egg and milk; dust berries with little flour and add Jast. Bake in dcep muffin pans in hot oven 30 minutes, CRAB MEAT AU GRATIN. Two cups crab meat, one cup white sauce, one-third teaspoon salt, two tablespoons buttered crumbs, two tablespoons grated cheese, pepper to taste. Add white sauce to fish, cover with crumbs and then cheese and dots of butter. SHEPHERD'S PIE.. Two cups cold cooked beef (left overs), one and one-haif cups gravy or brown sauce, four cups hot mashed potatoes, three tablespoons hot milk, salt and pepper to taste. Cut meat into small pleces, mix with gravy and add seasoning. A very small plece of bay leaf gives a nice flavor. Beat potatoes tq make them light and add milk. Place prepared meat in deep pie dish ands cover evenly with hot mashed potatoes. Place bits of butter over potatoes and brown in quick oven. 4 rolled, the paper is laid on the garments and paper and frock are rolled up to- gether. This brings the paper always next to the goods. As in all packing in which paper is JuE ith' the things.i1b mmet ot be aid flat, but be crushed, and so form a soft padding. Only so will it be of | value. . The garments should not be | rolled or folded too tightly but they | should not be too loosely packed. Noth- |ing is more sure to make creases | in garments than to have them shift |about in a sult case, trunk .or any | luggage. It must be remembered that | the luggage is not always Tight side up. | It must be so packed that the articles | will remain in the places they are put however much the containers are banged about. | Hats that are felt or crushable straw are the things to take when traveling | for they offer no difficulties in packing. | If a stiff straw must go, the entire packing of a small container, such as a suit case, has to be adapted to it. Fill | the' crown with handkerchiefs, stock- | ngs and any articles that can be stowed in_ without “altering the shape of the crown. Make a nest of lingerie, stock- ings or anything that can be coileg and | fit_the crown into it, having the' brim | uppermost. Gently force the articles | against the crown so that it is firm. It | will not give because of the things in- ide it. Lay the folded or rolled arti- | cles in the remaining space. There | may be room above the hat to lay some | things in a suit case. If the hat has a brim, pack under it so that the shape | is not bent. Shoes are so awkward to pack that women who take several pairs some- | times have separate holders for them. Next Monday I will tell how to make them. If the shoes are packed in the | luggage, put them along the sides. Fill the toes with soft pieces or with | erushed tissue paper, to keep the shoes in shape. If articles are put in, the | Toom is used advantageously. It is | possible to so deftly pack the inside of shoes and stow things about, that little room is wasted. By putting the shoes along the sides of luggage, the entire c;mer space is left free for garments, ete. (Covyright, 1930.) My Neighbor Says: ‘To prevent a hammock or swing marking the piazza wall cut two rubber sponges in halves and attach them to the back at the four corners. If the ham- mock or swing then sirikes the wall it will not mark it. * Wash an angora sweater in (warm water with a little white ! soap, and rinse it in clear water of the same temperature. Wring 1t out in a turkish towel, shake and lay on a dry towel in the to dry. ‘Turn frequently so it will dry evenly. Garbage pails should be emp- tied daily and rinsed with cold water. Once & week scald them with hot sado water and scrub well; then dry in the sun. ‘To disinfect garbage cans burn a few newspapers on top of gar- bage occasionally during the warm weather, By Thornton W. Burgess. and so unusual, that I should think you would like to keep him as a pet. You could clip one of his wings, so that he_couldn’t fly.” Farmer Brown’s Boy sighed. ‘I'd like to. But it wouldn't be fair to Egret. . You know, to oe happy Herons want to be where it is marshy and swampy and where there is plenty of water. Egret couldn’t be truly happy up here. No, I shall let him go as soon as I am sure that his wing Is streng and he is quite ablé to take care of himself.” Meanwhile, as often as possible Farmer Brown's Boy took Egret down to the Smiling Pool to catch his own meals. And he did! He proved himseif & good fisherman. It was indeed a spry minnow or frog that got away a. once coming within reach of Egret. ‘While he was waiting for fish or frog o come, Egret would stand motionless, looking off into space. Yes, sir, that is what he would do. And Farmer Brown’s Boy, noticing this, would feel sure that Egret was dreaming of his freedom. And Farmer Brown's Boy was right. Egret was thinking of his free- dom. He was dreaming of the days when those great, broad wings of his carried him wherever he wanted to go, and he was wondering if ever again he would take long journeys on them. He loved these visits to the Smiling Pool, but at the sime time they made him homesick. i came a day when Farmer Brow leg of Egret. Egret didn’t know it. He didn’t know that when Farmer-Brown's Boy set him down on the edge of the Smiling Pool he was as free as ever he had been.- He began fishing as usual. Farmer Brown's Boy withdrew a short distance. It suddenly came to Egret that he was walking more freely than usual. Still, he thought nothing of it. After a while he tried his wings, as he had so often’ tried them of late. Al- ways before there had been a gentle tug at one leg where the string was fastened. This time there was no tug. | Egret went up, up. That wounded wing was strong now. ‘With long legs stretched out behind him, his neck folded back so that his head rested between his shoulders, the great white bird mounted into the air. Perhaps you can guess how he felt. Farmer Brown's Boy could. Up, up went Egret and over toward the Big River. Then he turned, swung about in a circle and came back over Farmer Brown's Boy. It was as if he had re- turned to say good-by. Perhaps he had, Who knows? Anyway, Farmer Brown's Boy was quite sure thai he had. Egret circled saround the Smiling Pool, then once more headed for the Big River, and this time he kept right | on going. Farmer Brown's Boy watched him disappear above the tree tops. ‘Then, with a little sigh, he turned and made his way home. - “Im sorry and I'm glad,” sald Farmer Brown’s Boy. “And, oh, how I do hope | ever have a chance to shoot again.” (Copyright, 1930.) Raspberry Bran Gems. Mix together one cupful of graham flour, one cupful of whole wheat flour, one cupful of bran, one teaspoonful of baking.soda, two teaspoonfuls of baking powder, one tablespoonful of sugar, and one teaspoonful of salt. Add two tablespoonfuls of cooking oil, one egg well beaten, two cupfuls of sour milk or buttermilk, and half a cupful of raspbej jam, Beat together thor- oughly and pour into well greased gem pans. Bake for 25 minutes in & hot oven, Egret f Leg of Lamb. Purchase & 5-pound leg of lamb, wipe it with a damp cloth and place it in a dish of vinegar, adding to it one onion cut small, 10 peppercorns, six cloves and one-fourth teaspoonful of ginger. You will need three or four cupfuls of vinegar. Let the lamb re- for a day, Re- ,_season, and roast in the It tastes like venison. v Port Said, Egypt, has a which said to be the only one of its kind the world. It is & warehouse, run an Englishman, which is full of col- stories, as Chinese it and leave f stamped, main in the vinegar one day, then turn | thing WHO REMEMBERS? BY DICK MANSFIELD. Rexistered’ U. 8. Patent Office. ‘When Harry Alimond was the main- spring of the famous ‘“Home Defense League” in Washington during the World War? SUB ROSA BY MIML Minerva's Mirror. All men admire beauty in a woman and most men are more impressed by it than they should be. But more even than beauty, men ad- mire and respect personal efficiency in women. You will find fat, bald-headed men in the first rows at a musical comedy, but the men with a more sensible cast to their countenanees and outlooks do not have to sit under the orchestra leader’s baton to enjoy the show. They know that beauty is more than skin deep, in spite of the libelous old saying. Beauty, in this finer and deeper sense, is the royalty which is paid as the result of personal, spiritual and cultural efficiency. Love is the religion of the heart—a kind of faith devised by man as a sub- stitute for his lack of knowledge of the source and inner workings of life and nature. We must, you know, be subli- mated ourselves and sublimate life— or don't we? ‘The story of mankind is incrusted with great blots of blood because puny human minds cannot recognize trifles for what they are. A bridge player makes an incorrect lead and his partner feels outraged beyond all consolation; one word leads to another and another friendship is blighted. Incalculable, indeed, are the injuries fi!l'lflich follow_in the seething e of s - es. Man is 5o vain that he thinks he can !et along with two women when he has ailed to get along with one. It is not always true that there is safety in numbers. In these da he boast of heraldry, the pomp of power,” depends peculiarly, it would seem, on tomorrow’s stock mar- ket quotations. An anonymous wit gives this defini- tion of love: “Love is the last word in a 10-word telegram.” All that glitters, of course, is not gold —sometimes it is platinur. A lorgnette is simply a pair of old- fashioned.spectacles in a high hat. A canary in a bird cage is worth two in_the bush, too. Maybe the author can help you with your problems. Write her, sending self-addressed envelope for m}%ob"llht. 1930.) NANCY PAGE Mapners Start When One Is Young. BY FLORENCE LA GANKE, One thing Aunt Nancy had learned from the nursery school that Joan attended during the Winter. 1t was this: Children cannot be allowed to run riot with no attention paid to manners or social graces and then in later years expect them to be patterns of well bred ladies or gentlemen. Social customs should be a part of their training from the cradle. A child who 1s never taught to say “please” or “thank you” is going to find it diffi- s Boy untled the string from 1he | cult in later years to put these polite phrases in their proper places. In times of emotiohal stress manners which are not ingrained will be shuf- fled off and earlier manners of speech will show forth, Aunt Nancy learned too that.even small children of four and five could be taught the rudiments of host and hostess menners, When Joan came home one day from playing next door and asked whether she might not have a wea party her aunt told her that she would be only too glad to help her plan one, You ought to have seen the pride with which Joan went around the neighborhood asking the playmates 4o that no killer with a dreadful gun will | come to her tea party. She wanted to wear her prettiest dress, but Aunt Nancy told her that some of the little girls might come in play dresses and then they would be uncomfortable if their hostess were bet- ter dressed than they. They planned & menu like this: Thin bread and ‘butter, cut in animal shapes, with the cookie cutter; plain lemonade and pink and white mints. They enjoyed every- from the greeting by Joan to the last wave of her little dimpled hand. ‘They might have had simple cookies. Nancy has a few in her on Tea ‘Time ‘Write to _her, care of this paper, inclosing a stamped, self- addressed envelope, (Copyright, 1930.) Believes Pupils ‘Would Fail to Profit. the Art t . « i HDOTO yUIx Be Taught. FAMOUS educator and psychologist suggests that the most feasible remedy for the mismating of youth in marriage would be the establishment of courses for matrimony in schools where family life in its social, economic and biological aspects could be studied. ‘This is an intrigul theory. It is cheering to think of a young man giving as_much Lhml[h:n{nd efl‘zfl. to learning how to be a good husband as he does how to be a good plumber, and stud: the idiosyncrasies of the feminine temperament as thoroughly as he does workings of a gasoline engine, Likewise it is encouraging to think of flappers taking matrimony in & serious way and devoting as much time to developing their technique in handling husbands as they do to acquiring the touch system in typewriting. Certainly a school of matrimony that would teach young people how to pick out their mates scientifically instead of marrying on the grab-bag prin- ciple, as they do at present, would meet a long-felt want. Also, it would have a wide scope of usefulness if it could prepare them beforehand for the inevitable disillusions and disappointments of connubial life and thus take .the edge off the shock of their finding out that they had married just plain, ordinary human beings instead of the romantic heroes and angels that they thought they were getting. . One loves to contemplate the earnest-eyed young students committing to | means an outlay of mouey. heart the precepts that would teach them that marriage is very much like an: other business and the way to make a success of it is by going at it with intel- ligence, tact, pdtience, perseverance and a settled determination to make a g0 of it. Surely no institution of higher learning could do more to spread sweetness and light than the one that taught boys and. girls how to live together in peace and harmony, how to sell themselves to each other, how to avoid arguments and family spats, how to respect each other’s personal liberty. ‘Without floubt: girls would be taught in the matrimonial kindergarten the importance of feeding the brute and that no love can survive being fed dish- water coffee and soggy bread and tough meat. to the auspicious moment in which to ask for money and tell that mother is coming for & nice, long visit. And surely in even the pre-school period a boy would be taught the A B C's of matrimony, which so many illiterate husbands never learn—to tell their wives every day that they get more beautiful in every way; to their batting average of kissing, and keep especially would they be drilled in they would not be paralyzed with amazement when they found out that when a man dances at his wedding he has to pay the piper. Unfortunately, up to now we have all had to be self-educated in matrimony, and by the time we have learned how to read the partners of our bosoms like a book and have got their numbers, our knowledge comes too late to do us any good. We have made the mistakes that are past all rectifying. So, undoubtedly we would be saved many heart-breaking blunders if we took a college course in ‘matrimony. But if this utopian plan of establishing classes, in which the young shall be taught the art or science of mairimony were put into actual operation, would they learn anything from it? laboratory i life in its every aspect? For, after all, what is every home but a which every girl and boy has ample opportunity to study family DOROTHY DIX. (Copyright, 1930.) PARIS Jane Regny’s Yree-in-one co‘ng//b@s . ared baflu}zg suty BY MARY ELIZABETH ALLEN If I Had Money. ‘Why bother about thrift? Why not spend today and let tomorrow take care of itself? Why should any one save? When one dies one cannot take one's money with her to the places beyond. Such questions und thoughts are only of the moment. Women who have lived at all have known want, and want that a relatively small amount of cash could have spared them. Some day a child will come home pale with fright with a doctor’s report to blurt out in outspoken dread. An operation will be required. A treatment is essential to a return to health. Either ‘Whence? A son will face a doubiful future wearily and maybe .hopelessly. I he only had money to “go into business for himself.” Without money he will never step out of his rut. The value of dollars at a time like that! Your daughters grow up. Your resl- dence 1s no longer the sort of place that is representative of you and your kind. A better background might mean better matrimonial chances. Yes, of course, you won’t put on airs or dress your daughters up for market. But we all know that we are judged on appearances before folks get to know us well enough to judge our in- trinsic worths. ~ An attractive home only costs & few dollars more a month . .. but how often does & despondent mother lack those few dollars. Reflect some day on all the tragic musings in life which follow the lament . “if T had money.” If one has money one can restore health, achieve | independence, buy the many things that help to make a home happy and contented. Unless these things mean little to you, don't gamble for them. Don't gamble on the future or with your funds of the present. Saving and sound investing are the sure ways. Have money and the things it will buy, and, of course, have the things that money won't buy, too. It is only about 10,000 years since mastodons and mammoths roamed about .the place now Chicago, accord- ing to Prof. Elmer S. Riggs of the Field Museum. Sickness, Suffering and Sorrow Trail THE ‘EARFUL FLY-TOX KILLS THEM ALL Absolutely Harmless.to People and Animals ; ‘They would be instructed as up the matrimonial multiplication table of bills, food bills and rent bills and doctors’ bills and dress bills and beauty-shop bills and bills and bills and bills, 50 that CANDIDATES Candidates are growing thicker, I behold them everywhere; and they bow and beam and snicker when they greet me in my lair. And they treat me' so politely, as their platforms they pro- duce; 1t would be a thing unsightly I turned the watchdog loose. man who'd be elected to the post of county clerk; he is able and ; he would doubtless do good work; but he interrupts my rea of the book o'er which I gloat; I bel his form receding, and remark: “He's lost my vote. Any man who talks campaign- ing when he sees he is a bore, mustn't g0 around complaining if I show him to the door.” Comes a man who would be sheriff, and his errand is in_vain; I'm i not feeling like a seraph. I have 19 kinds of pain. I would talk of things I suffer, of the pills I have to take; but he shuts me off, this duffer, with a sgiel that, makes me ache. If he gets the snap he’s chasing, he will drive all vice ‘away; he will stop the games de- basing that the crooks and gamblers play. * He is full of pleasant wheezes, but he will not let me talk of my 49 diseases, 50 I back him off the walk. One would join the legislature, there to save the public’s goat; he is of an earnest nature, and he seems to need my vote. But he comes when I am fretting, brooding 'meath my green- wood tree; in his folly he’s forgetting that his graft looks cheap to me. I have dark and grievous troubles which require my thoughtful care; so his words seem much like bubbles as they float upon the air. WALT MASON. (Copyright, 1930.) SONNYSAYINGS BY FANNY Y. CORY. Us usin’ this hole under the porch fer a snugglers’ cave. Now all us has to do is find scmethin’ to snuggle. LITTLE BENNY BY LEE PAPE. Me and pop was taking a wawk be- fore supper, and pop started to look in the window of a umberella and cane store, saying, Theres some nifty looking sticks in there. In my fathers day a man wassent considered well dressed unless he carried a cane, but nowadays its gone out of fashion. Well, what do I care for fashion? Im a free tl er, Im going in and buy that y;llow cane l‘-nmh dtha bulldogs hed for ‘a handle, e sed. - ‘Wich he did, and we kepp on Wawk- ing, pop swinging the cane and hitting the payment with the end of it, saying, After all theres a certain satisfaction in carrying a cane that nuthing elts could give except possibly wawking the deck of your own yatt in new flannel trousers. ‘Wich just then Puds Simkinses father ‘went pass, saying, Hello Potts, I dident know you had gone in the lumber bizness. And he kepp on going still lafing, Wg saying, This werld mite not be perfeci if all the envy and jellissy were taken out of it, but a grate improvement would be noticed immeeditly. And pritty soon - somebody elts started to laff, being Dr, Rover, saying, Do you need my services, Potts, what is :1' & broken leg or just a sprained ankle? a_ha. Pop not laffing back, and pritty soon another man he knew asked him why he dident have a flower in his button- hole to make the picture compleet, and I sed, Do you wunt me to carry it a A while, pop? and he sed, Well, perhaps its your tern, I dont wunt to seem sel- fish. Besides, if I give them something reely rediculous to' laff at, such as a small child carrying a big cane, Id like to see if any of these guffawing asses |will laff in the rite place. So in a spirit of unselfish scientific research Ill let you carry it the rest of the way home, he sed. ) ‘Wich he did, and nobody laffed. AUNT HET BY ROBERT QUILLEN. 1 |New French Discov- ery Makes Regrowth iImpouible. Hair Roots Destroyed—, Never to Return Koremlu Cream is guaranteed to permanently remove superfluous hair from face or any part of the body—without pain or discomfort. If it fails, it does not cost you a Koremlu devitalizes the hair duce hair again. possible. Not & depilatory which merely burns hair off and brings it in coarser @nd thicker than ever, but & flm and most_efficacious home treal it which rids you of beauty-marring hair for all time. The skin is left in perfect con- . Koremlu cream is harm- less to the most tender skin. Many women continue to use Koremlu as a cold cream—its action is so bene- ficial to the skin. Cost is amazingly ble compared to results. FEATURES. ROYAL HE-MEN OF HISTORY One Blow of His Battle-Axe Saved King Robert Bruce and Scotland at Bannockburn. -« BY J. P. GLASS. BRUCE SWUNG HIS BATTLE AXE IN A TERRIFIC BLOW AS SIR HENRY ‘WENT PAST. As Edward II of England drew near with his army of 100,000, King Robert Bruce of Scotland, who could muster only 40,000, sought to dispose his force S0 that he could offset the enemy's advantage of numbers. His cavalry being inferior, he decided to fight on foot and to await the attack near Stirling in a field called the New Park, because it was so covered with trees and brush and cut up by swamps that the English horse would be ham- pered. He dug pits and trenches in the only open ground near, which was on his left, and filled them with pointed stakes and calthorps. The burn of Bannock protected his right and the village of St. Ninian was in front. It was June 23, 1313, and a Sunday. .Bruce's soldiers heard mass, confessed as dying men, and kept the vigil of St. John with bread and water. Edward sent hedrsmen to outflank the Scottish force, and this opened the engagement. The English force was turned back in disorder. It was at this moment that an inci- dent occurred which might have crushed the hopes of Scotland without further delay, The foremost English battalions had come into the New Park. Headed by the Earls of Gloucester and Hereward, they had drawn near enough to see the faces of the defenders. Along the front of the Scottish lines , rode a magnificent figure on a pony. MOTHERS' AND THEIR CHILDREN. “Washin on Towel.” Does Johnny have the annoying habit of merely dipping his hands into water and wiping all the dirt on the towel? Do not be unduly put out about it if he does for it is a practice common most masculine juveniles. Irstead of nagging about the matter and actually accomplishing nothing, make Johnny wash the towel. This will be following out the well establighed principle 6f suiting the punishment to the offense and will be effective, or at least it ‘was so in our home. Let him wrestle with the problem of gettin: the dirt out of the towel and he will be more careful about putting it in in the future. Baltimore Chow-Chow. Peel and slice one peck of ripe tomatoes, add one quart of sliced onions and one cupful of salt, let stand for two hours, then drain, n boil for two hours in a preserving kettle, then add one pint of cider vinegar, on fourth pound of ground mustard, half a ful of cayenne pepper, one tablespoonful each ‘of ground cinna- mon, ground cloves and celery seed. Boil for another hour and seal in pint Jars. Alex H. Rogers, 86, of Murphysboro, 11, and James Jumper, 74, of Chicago, cousins, had not met for 56 years until recently. Buy Health : of It was the King of the Scots, his golden crown set atop his helmet, making a final review of his forces. “There goes Bruce!” said an Engli a knight, pointing. Sir Henry Bohun, a cousin of the Earl of Hereward, hearing these words, was seized with a sudden notion. Without a word, he urged his horses into a gallop and charged impetuously down upon King Robert. It was one of those brilliant and audacious actions which sometimes change the fate of nations. Bohun expected that the mere weight of his great war horse would bear down Bruce, who was mounted only upon a pony, and he would kill him. A lesser man than Bruce would have become the victim of the charge, and the Scots would have been left leader- less. But Bruce, warned just in time by the cries of his followers, swerved his pony to one side, avoidi the thrust of Bohun’s lance, and, rising in his stirrups, swung his battle-ax in a terrific blow as Sir Henry went past. That one blow cleft the Englishman's skull almost in two. He dropped dead from his horse, a‘symbol of the defeat that was to be meted out to his fellows. ‘The Scottish chiefs were thrilled by Bruce's prowess. But, terrified by the risk he had run, they begged him to be more careful. Biruce smiled at them trangquilly and pointed to the edge of his ax, which had been blunted. J“The worst' of it is that I have spoiled my good battle-ax,” he said. . Bannockburn made Scotland an in- dependent kingdom for three more cen- turies, (Copyright, 1930.) | | | - REMOVES WRINKLES An amazing new cleansing cream has been discovered called Marinello | | Tissue Cream. It is already the fa- | | vorite among leading beauties of the | d society, as well as cos-| everywhere. Doesn't look nor work lke any | cream you ever used. Melts the | pores, lightens the skin slightly, cannot enlarge the pores, cannot grow hair on your face, overcomes dryness, removes and prevents lines, i flaking and wrinkles and wipes away Get a jar of Marinello Tissue | Creany from the stores named be- . Cleanse your face with it twice |8 day for 10 days using no soap or water. If you are not overjo! ‘the way it removes wrinkles and | gives new -softness and beauty, to | your skin, send us the lid of your | Marinello jar ‘and we will |your money. The Marinello Com- pany, 72 Fifth Avenue, New York | City. Sold at these beauty shops: | Cathedral Mansions Beauty Shop - . I 3000 Comecticut Avemue | Corkery Beauty Shop 819 18th Street N.W. Vanity Beauty Shop 1348 Connecticut Avenue N.W. | Eleanor Snyder Beauty Shop I 1090 National Press Building | Helen Powers Beauty Shop | 725 19th Street N.W. | Florastelle Beauty Shop | 308 H Street N.E. | Mrs. Malone's Marinello Shop I 1832 Columbia Road | | Ames Beauty Shop | 2202 dth_gireet N.E. | Marinello Daylight Beauty SHop 5 Street N.W. | 20 | Anne Campbell Beauts’ Shop. i 727 12th Strect N.W. | | Colony Beauty shop 011" Georaia Avenue N.W. Marinello Approved Shop | 1203 F Street N.W. | The Cosmetique Beauty Shop | 151_Mount Pleasant Street |8ax See Beauty Shoppe i Homer Buding | Marguerite Beauty Shop No. | 23 Penna. Avenue S.E. | Lady Jane Beauty Shop 1304 F St. N.W. Marti-Nita Beauty Shop | | 35 York Road, Baltimore Dorothea Mae Beauty Shoppe 3646 34th St., Mount Rainier your grocer Your grocer hés Health to sell—the kind of Health that comes from light, nourishing, easily digested foods . You will find it in every package of Shredded Wheat. Eat it every day with milk or cream and you will be healthy and strong, ready for every test of mental and physical endurance. All the body-building elemen ts in the whole wheat grain—nothing added, nothing taken away —and so easily digested. It's delicious with fruits. WITH ALL THE BRAN OF THE WHOLE WHEAT